Rachel Reeves warns Sadiq Khan she will defeat London mayor’s bid to sabotage Heathrow expansion - Chancellor and the mayor of London at odds over controversial plans to add third runway to Heathrow
Rachel Reeves has rejected criticism of the Government’s support to expand Heathrow Airport after she set out plans to remove barriers to growth in the hope of kickstarting the UK’s stuttering economy.
Chancellor also vows bat tunnels will not be used in UK infrastructure projects as she defends new growth measures
Rachel Reeves is facing fierce opposition within Labour over her plans for a third runway at Heathrow Airport.
The Chancellor's determination to grow the UK economy has her turning on fellow MPs who risk "putting their own interests above those of the country".
The London Mayor is sharpening his knives for the long-delayed third runway – but is this a matter of policy or political manoeuvring?
Heathrow's third runway can be built and operating in a decade's time, Chancellor Rachel Reeves has said. Reeves told the BBC she wanted to see "spades in the ground" in the current Parliament and planes to start using the runway by 2035.
Londoners strongly support Heathrow building a third runway, a poll has shown, as the Government faces a row with Sadiq Khan over the plan. More than half of people in the capital (56%) surveyed said they were in favour of the expansion, which Chancellor Rachel Reeves on Wednesday announced the Government would back.
Heathrow 's third runway could be built and in use by 2035, Rachel Reeves has signalled. Asked for a timeline on the plans, which she backed on Wednesday, the Chancellor told BBC Breakfast: "We want to see spades in the ground in this Parliament.
Blair and Brown pay tribute to Labour guardian who 'changed lives of millions’ - Keir Starmer has been joined by Gordon Brown, Ed Miliband, Sadiq Khan and Yvette Cooper at service for Tony Blair’s for
Rachel Reeves opened up a deep split at the heart of Labour last night as she gambled on expanding Heathrow Airport to revive her flagging growth plans.The Chancellor publicly backed controversial plans for a third runway at Britain’s biggest airport as she vowed to ‘fight’ the ‘blockers’ holding back the economy.